logo
Barstool's Big Cat thinks Fox partnership will have much different feel than ill-fated ESPN show

Barstool's Big Cat thinks Fox partnership will have much different feel than ill-fated ESPN show

New York Post18-07-2025
When Barstool Sports brings its brand of sports talk to Fox Sports, it will 'get to be Barstool,' Dan 'Big Cat' Katz said during Thursday's 'Barstool Yak' on Thursday.
Katz was discussing the new partnership between Fox Sports and Barstool that was announced this week, combining the two household names in sports around the network's college football programming and a new FS1 studio show.
The latter show, in particular, is the second go-around for Barstool when it comes to working with a network on a linear program, and its first since the ill-fated 'Van Talk' that lasted one episode in 2017 before it was canceled by ESPN.
Advertisement
Katz expects that the new deal and studio show will be a better opportunity than the ESPN partnership for 'Van Talk' ended up being because 'the world's changed.'
'[FS1] realizes, whenever Barstool Van Talk got canceled, 2017, look, [Pat] McAfee's thriving,' he said. 'Shane Gillis just did the ESPYs last night. I think the world is changing, I think people understand entertainment is entertainment.'
Advertisement
NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Blaney speaks with Barstool Sports Dan 'Big Cat' Katz on set of 'The Yak' at Barstool Sports Chicago on February 27, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.
Getty Images
'Van Talk' ended abruptly due in part to previous comments made by Katz and Barstool founder Dave Portnoy about then-ESPNer Sam Ponder, and former-ESPN president John Skipper later said that the network wasn't able to distance itself from the Barstool brand as much as it wanted.
Katz feels the new Fox partnership will allow Barstool to remain true to what it does best.
'I think it's going to be a lot of our audience tuning in,' Katz said. 'And I think it's going to be a lot different than the ESPN deal we did back in 2017, where I think Fox is a very willing partner that reached out to us, you know what I mean? So it feels different in that they want us, not we're asking them, 'Please, please put us on at 1 in the morning.'
Advertisement
Dave Portnoy, wearing an Indiana Fever hat, poses for a photo while attending a WNBA game between the Indiana Fever and the Connecticut Sun on July 15, 2025, at TD Garden in Boston, MA.
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Barstool and Fox Sports announced the deal Thursday, and it will include Portnoy becoming a regular contributor on 'Big Noon Kickoff. It will also feature appearances by a number of Barstool Sports personalities, including Katz.
'The Barstool College Football Show' will also be on location with 'Big Noon Kickoff' for select games during the season.
The daily studio show will air for two hours Monday through Friday
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'The best dad.' IndyCar's Scott McLaughlin shares message after Bubba Wallace won Brickyard 400
'The best dad.' IndyCar's Scott McLaughlin shares message after Bubba Wallace won Brickyard 400

Indianapolis Star

time4 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

'The best dad.' IndyCar's Scott McLaughlin shares message after Bubba Wallace won Brickyard 400

INDIANAPOLIS — Bubba Wallace claimed his first NASCAR Cup Series win at the Brickyard 400 on Sunday, the third victory of his career, and even after taking the lead on Lap 143 had his own doubts. "The last 20 laps, there were ups and downs of me telling myself I wasn't going to be able to do it," he said. The race broadcast shared fuel concerns, one that even Denny Hamlin was unsure of, but Wallace did a burnout after crossing the bricks first after a red flag for rain in Turn 1 that lasted 18 minutes, and then a second overtime. Wallace was able to kiss the bricks with his wife, Amanda, and their son, Becks, who was two days shy of being 10 months old. A photo shortly after was shared on Twitter, and IndyCar driver Scott McLaughlin had a heartfelt message. McLaughlin had finished, key word of late as he poked fun at recapping his own race, 10th at the IndyCar race at Laguna Seca, which was won by Alex Palou before the Brickyard 400 wrapped up despite a later start time. "This guy is the best dad," McLaughlin wrote on Twitter. "Has been going through it with the racing gods. Always one of the first people to text me if we have a bad day. So happy for Bdub, a great dude and I hope the haters enjoyed that." McLaughlin's 10th-place finish ended a drought of consecutive races with DNFs. He crashed on Lap 1 of Iowa Race 2 and again on Lap 3 at Toronto, finishing 26th in both races. McLaughlin sits tied for 11th with Rinus VeeKay (259 points) in the championship standings in what's become a Palou runaway (590) with a slim margin for Pato O'Ward (469) to catch him.

'I was praying.' Why Kyle Larson couldn't overtake Bubba Wallace to repeat as Brickyard 400 winner
'I was praying.' Why Kyle Larson couldn't overtake Bubba Wallace to repeat as Brickyard 400 winner

Indianapolis Star

time4 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

'I was praying.' Why Kyle Larson couldn't overtake Bubba Wallace to repeat as Brickyard 400 winner

INDIANAPOLIS — Kyle Larson's best efforts to repeat as Brickyard 400 champion at Indianapolis Motor Speedway came up short as the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion finished second to Bubba Wallace. After NASCAR brought out the red flag due to the edge of a rain shower hitting Turn 1, Larson started outside of Wallace in the first overtime restart. After contact back in the field required another restart, the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet was unable to match Wallace's pace as the field got up to speed. '(Wallace) was in first gear on both (restarts), but the first one he was just a little bit faster paced to the restart zone,' Larson said. 'So I stayed in second gear and he got a launch and I was able to just kind of barely hang on his right rear corner and then drag him back and kind of pull my momentum to halfway past him. 'And yeah, I was just hoping that he could maybe have a moment underneath me and get loose and I would have the momentum to get by him. And then the second one, he brought the pace down so slow, I had to be in first gear as well and just kind of launched with him. So I had no momentum at that time.' Larson, the 2024 Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year after his first double attempt, was outside Wallace as the pair headed to Turn 1 but couldn't keep up with the No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota and fell back in line. Larson was four-tenths of a second behind Wallace as the pair started the final lap but couldn't make up the difference. Both drivers had fuel concerns as the race approached its conclusion, especially Wallace as he pitted two laps before Larson. 'I don't really know their strategy and then our team's trying to piece it together the best that they can,' Larson said. 'So it's all just guesstimation. Even then, they're probably guesstimating as well, so I was praying that he'd run out of fuel, but I also didn't want to run out of fuel myself, either. So it is what it is.' A handful of drivers pitted under caution for the end of the race's second 50-lap stage and those drivers led Wallace, Larson and the rest of the field who waited to pit under green with about forty laps to go in the race's scheduled 160-lap distance. After the drivers who pitted under yellow made their final pit stops under green, Larson and Wallace gradually climbed through the field to first and second with Wallace leading by over four seconds until the caution for rain on Lap 155. Larson led the race twice for 19 laps after starting 13th. The three-time Knoxville Nationals champion finished eighth at the end of the first 50-lap stage and second after the race's second 50-lap stage.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store